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Idaho News Sun November 23, 2008
U.S. Sen.-elect Jim Risch, R-Idaho, named two familiar confidantes to his congressional transition team.
Survey fails to show grizzlies lurking in Idaho
LEWISTON, Idaho - A summer survey that used dozens of remote cameras in hopes of capturing images of grizzly bears has failed to show any evidence the massive carnivores are roaming the wilds of northern Idaho.
Investigating Idaho's Top Secret Predator Panel
This is a story about protecting your children, about your right to know who are the truly dangerous sex offenders who live in your neighborhood.
House where family died to be demolished
The home along Interstate 90 where Joseph Edward Duncan killed three members of a family will be demolished soon.
Idaho midwives to again seek licensing bill
A bill that would license midwives and allow them to dispense some medications will be brought to Idaho legislators again in the 2009 session, its sponsors say.
Idaho Unemployment Insurance Tax to Jump 70%
The severe economic downturn that has put an unprecedented number of workers in line for unemployment benefits will drive the tax rates employers pay to support the benefit program up 70 percent in 2009.
Idaho Dept. of Labor Phones Still on the Fritz
Idahoans attempting to get their unemployment benefits are having a difficult time because the Idaho Department of Labor's phone system has been down since the weekend.
Mayor sorry for kids' 'assassinate Obama' chant
The mayor of an eastern Idaho town where second- and third-grade students on a school bus chanted 'assassinate Obama!' after the Nov. 4 election has publicly apologized, saying there's no excuse for such behavior.Rexburg Mayor Shawn Larsen wrote in a guest editorial sent Tuesday to local newspapers that he was saddened by the notoriety his community had received over the incident, both across the United States and abroad.Larsen told The Associated Press that a formal response to the incident in his city was sorely needed.
Environmentalists rally against gasification plant
The list includes the Sierra Club, Earthjustice Legal Defense Fund, the Idaho Conservation League and the Greater Yellowstone Coalition.
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Sun Sep 18, 2005
Utilities Tap Heat from Earth's Core
BOISE, Idaho - Hot water bubbles and steams out of the ground in many parts of Idaho, and resourceful residents use it for everything from heating their cities to raising alligators.
Early residents used the area's hot springs to bathe, wash and cook. Now Idaho's hot springs and underground reservoirs heat several buildings in Boise, including the capitol, a neighborhood of stately homes, a Veterans' Administration hospital, several greenhouses and a coral business.
As the cost of energy from conventional sources increases, various advocates of using natural hot water power, known as geothermal, are hoping to expand its uses. An Idaho developer is working on a plant in southern Idaho that would draw even hotter water from deep under the earth and convert it to electricity.
In Boise, the state Water Resources board has imposed a moratorium until 2008 on new use of the geothermal aquifer because water levels dropped several years ago. After the city water system installed a system to inject the water back into the ground, water levels stabilized.
The level of the aquifer that serves Boise is closely watched by the Idaho Department of Water Resources, which administers the water rights for all of the state.
Kent Johnson, an engineer who works for the city of Boise, thinks it's time for more users, like Boise State, to sign on.
"It's a renewable, valuable resource that we should be using," Johnson said. "It saves on fossil fuel, we're not burning anything, so we're not affecting the air quality."
Used since ancient times
Geothermal heat has been used since ancient times in the volcanic regions of the world, including parts of Asia, Europe, and North America.
Boise, Idaho's largest city, developed its natural hot springs in 1890 - around the time Idaho gained statehood - when a local company drilled and found water at about 172 degrees, said Arthur Hart, a Boise historian. A long row of elegant homes, Warm Springs Avenue, was built to use it.
"Geothermal heat is one of the most valuable resources in Idaho," said Leroy Headlee, who uses it to raise coral at his Geothermal Aquaculture Research Foundation in Boise. "It's like free energy."
The city of Boise also operated a large, luxurious hot-water bathing complex, the Natatorium, until it was damaged in a storm in the 1930s.
Over the years, enterprising Northwesterners have used hot springs in a variety of ways. A farmer in Hagerman uses the hot water to raise alligators for meat and hides, and sturgeon for caviar. Klamath Falls, Ore., another city with a long geothermal tradition, uses its natural hot water to melt snow off sidewalks and bridges.
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